A History of the English ChurchDent, 1900 - 250 sivua |
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
abbeys Alfred Anglican Anglican Communion Anglo-Saxon Anglo-Saxon Church Archbishop Archbishop of Canterbury became Becket bishops bitter Britain Canterbury Canute Catholic Celtic Celtic Christianity centre century Charles Christianity Church of England Churchmen Cistercian clergy Communion conquerors Conquest Convocation Council Cranmer Crusades Danish death devoted doctrine Dunstan early earnest ecclesiastical Edward Edward the Confessor Edward VI Elizabeth Engle English Church Erasmus Ethelred Eucharist Europe Evangelical famous Franciscans Friars gradually Harthacanute Henry VIII Holy influence island King known land Lanfranc largely Laud learning loved Mary matters Mendicant Mercia mighty minister missionary monasteries monastic monks Norman North Northmen orders Oxford Pagan Papal Parker Parliament party passed period Pope possessed Prayer Book preacher prelate Puritan Queen Reformation reign religion religious houses revival Ridley Roman Rome Sacraments Saxon scholar sovereign spirit strange succession suppression teachers teaching theologians Thirty-nine Articles tion Transubstantiation vast Viking Wessex Whitgift Wilfrid William
Suositut otteet
Sivu 162 - Master Ridley, and play the man ; we shall this day light such a candle in England, as by God's grace shall never be put out.
Sivu 34 - So clean it was ruined amongst the English people, that there were very few on this side the Humber who could understand their service in English, or declare forth an epistle out of Latin into English ; and I think that there were not many beyond Humber. So few such there were, that I cannot think of a single one to the south of the Thames when I began to reign.
Sivu 33 - ... things with the better days that had gone before, he exclaims, " I wish thee to know that it comes very often into my mind, what wise men there were in England, both laymen and ecclesiastics, and how happy those times were to England ! The sacred profession was diligent both to teach and to learn. Men from abroad sought wisdom and learning in this country, though we must now go out of it to obtain knowledge if we should wish to have it.
Sivu 68 - I have toward you, in the first place make the holy church of God free, so that I will neither sell nor place at rent, nor, when archbishop, or bishop, or abbot is dead, will I take anything from the domain of the church, or from its men, until a successor is installed into it. And all the evil customs by which the realm of England was unjustly oppressed will I take away, which evil customs I partly set down here. 2.
Sivu 136 - ... divers and great solemn monasteries of this realm wherein, thanks be to God, religion is right well kept and observed...
Sivu 41 - This mystery is a pledge and a symbol; Christ's body is truth. This pledge we hold mystically until we come to the truth, and then will this pledge be ended. But it is, as we before said, Christ's body and his blood, not bodily but spiritually. Ye are not to inquire how it is done, but to hold in your belief that it is so done.
Sivu 53 - ... confirmation and consecration of the prelate elect. Thus it was certainly under our native kings, the descendants of Egbert, who, however, appear to have disposed of the most important sees in national councils, and with the consent of the bishops and ealdormen ; but under Canute and his successors the will of the king was notified in a more imperious manner, and by them the practice of investiture with the ring and crosier seems to have been introduced.
Sivu 70 - He was a good man and great was the awe of him; no man durst ill-treat another in his time: he made peace for men and deer.
Sivu 205 - Absolution was ordered to be pronounced by the Priest, instead of the Minister. The prayer for the King and the following prayers,' were printed in the Order of Morning and Evening Service. In the Litany, the words 'rebellion' and 'schism'were added to the petition against' sedition.' The words,' bishops, priests, and deacons,' were substituted for ' bishops, pastors, and ministers of the Church.